

Switching them out will make you feel better, too. What’s more, the new set provides comfort and looks quite good (especially compared to those you've owned for the better part of a decade).

But refreshing your underwear is as important as buying a new electric toothbrush. Relegated to the backs of dark dresser drawers and thoughtlessly shuffled on every morning, it suffers from neglect: Maybe you’re stuck in a rut, busy with life or spending money elsewhere. But there's a point there that there has to a finite amount of time rather than subjectively looking at the underwear and thinking.yeah it's time to get new ones now.that's the reason why most men have tattered underwear, they get so used to the frays and the fabric eroding that they don't notice it until there are holes everywhere.Too much of the time, underwear is an overlooked part of the wardrobe. For lesser mortals like us, we can bear in mind as a rule to which there are exceptions and push it to a year. Assuming you are a Tom Ford customer, and a Tom Ford customer has a tonne of money. Buying when it's cheaper.doesn't not make sense. Assuming you rotate say 7 pairs of designer underwear every week and throw out your less desirable underwear, 6 months might be reasonable to review buying new underwear. I'm in agreement with the other guy above re the number of pairs of underwear, but there has to be a sort of objective cut off point. He probably knows more than all of MFA put together.although he is a bit of a weirdo. Not going to lie, I wore the same pair for days in a row.and they still were reasonably fresh. Out of the boxers I have, I have to say UnderArmour are the best.they look good, feel good and also feel as thought they're made out of some kind of impenetrable material. And they're better than many designer brands out there. They are not anything special although I would infinitely prefer them to any of the brands you've mentioned in terms of form and function. I think it's a nice personal confidence thing for someone who is very neurotic and narcissistic (me). With that having been said, I wear designer boxers/briefs.

The other thing is you should be replacing boxers/briefs probably every 6 months or so.so rather than waiting, as many do, until you have holes in them, the fabric is still getting worn out and you need new ones. By the time you have your trousers off, no girl is going to really notice, it's dark, you're fumbling about, it's not an issue. I think designer boxes/briefs are an extravagance that you don't need. holes will come to you very soon if you wear jeans or pants with hard/stiff fabric.DO NOT THROW THEM IN HOT AIR DRYER (maybe only apply to the microfiber ones).choose darker colors if you don't want to see your white underwear gradually turning yellow.choose the microfiber ones, will not disappoint you.decently soft, weird fly stitches, otherwise comparable with newer lines.~CK iron strength except the waistband.8/10.ĬK magnetic force (metallic waistband with the color inverted at the bottom half) softness stays between CK bold and CK iron strength, WALKING CK ADVERTISEMENT, get it if you want others to know that you wear CK because the waist band is so big the entire world will see it.the fabric has a weird shine and i personally do not like it, the fly is different compared to other lines, tingling seams, WTF, 4/10.ĬK intense power (big, bold waistband + calvin klein logo in the center).soft but not to the level of CK steel, relatively small waistband, 9/10.7/10.ĬK iron strength (waistband has horizontal lines + small calvin klein logo in the center) not quite soft but is somewhat comfortable, cutting deviates from most other lines, small waistband.100/10.ĬK bold (black waistband + small calvin klein logo on the left)

they're super comfortable and i highly recommend it, worth every penny, may feel like a walking ad.I'll just give a quick review of CK's microfiber underwear linesĬK steel line (metallic waistband + big calvin klein logo)
